Surviving Genocide

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american expansion
american indian nations
Author_Jeffrey Ostler
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bloody kansas
casualties
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civil war
civil war era
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discrimination
disease
displacement
early 1800s
early 19th c
early nineteenth century
eastern states
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federalist period
federally sanctioned
genocide
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indian dispossession
indigenous lands
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late 1700s
late 18th c
late eighteenth century
manifest destiny
native american
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resistance
revolutionary era
revolutionary war
scalping
slaughter
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trail of tears
treaties
use of force

Product details

  • ISBN 9780300255362
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Nov 2020
  • Publisher: Yale University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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The first part of a sweeping multivolume history of the devastation brought to bear on Indian nations by U.S. expansion
 
“An elegant, organized narrative of the United States’ dispossession of Native lands east of the Mississippi. . . . A remarkable book in its breadth and scope.”—Ashley Riley Sousa, Canadian Journal of History
 
“Intense and well-researched, . . . ambitious, . . . magisterial. . . . Surviving Genocide sets a bar from which subsequent scholarship and teaching cannot retreat.”—Peter Nabokov, New York Review of Books
 
In this book, Jeffrey Ostler investigates how American democracy relied on Indian dispossession and the federally sanctioned use of force to remove or slaughter Indians in the way of U.S. expansion. He charts the losses that Indians suffered from relentless violence and upheaval and the attendant effects of disease, deprivation, and exposure. This volume centers on the eastern United States from the 1750s to the start of the Civil War.
 
An authoritative contribution to the history of the United States’ violent path toward building a continental empire, this ambitious and well-researched book deepens our understanding of the seizure of Indigenous lands, including the use of treaties to create the appearance of Native consent to dispossession. Ostler also documents the resilience of Native people, showing how they survived genocide by creating alliances, defending their towns, and rebuilding their communities.

Jeffrey Ostler is Beekman Professor of Northwest and Pacific History at the University of Oregon.

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